A conscience-stricken, Bible-toting killer calmly walked into a Greenwich Village police station and confessed to his role in three murders, saying he “had found God,” police sources said yesterday.

Troy Batson, 26, “said he came to the police to make it right between God and man,” said one official.

Sources said Batson, of 523 Kingston Ave. in Brooklyn, strolled into the station house on West 10th Street Wednesday evening and shocked cops with his revelations.

He first copped to a Jan. 1, 1996, double homicide in the 77th Precinct, in Crown Heights – and detectives from that precinct soon hustled up to Greenwich Village.

Batson went to the 77th Precinct, sources said, where he spent several hours detailing how he and an accomplice killed Maxwell Callum, 38, and Jeffreth Rose, 21, in Callum’s apartment at 78A Rogers Ave. in a dispute over a marijuana deal.

Batson said his accomplice shot Callum in the head with a 9mm semi-automatic – and he admitted shooting Rose at the accomplice’s urging.

“To add to his credibility, he knew things that you would have had to have been there to have known,” said one police official.

Batson was also asked whether he and his former buddy had committed any other crimes – and he admitted his role in a robbery-murder with the same accomplice years earlier.

“I shot somebody,” he admitted, adding that he didn’t know if the victim had lived or died.

Batson claimed that because the incident had happened nearly nine years ago, he was unable to provide many details about it. Detectives soon determined he was referring to the Sept. 28, 1992, shooting of Emilio Carasco, 26.

Carasco was shot in the head and upper chest while inside 1565 Fulton Street in Bedford-Stuyvesant during a robbery. He died the next morning.

Batson was charged with weapons possession and first-degree murder for the 1996 double slayings – a crime punishable by the death penalty. He was also charged with robbery, weapons possession and second-degree murder for the earlier killing.

Sources said Batson’s accomplice, whose name is being withheld at the request of law-enforcement officials, is doing time on unrelated convictions.

Police sources were at a loss to explain what prompted Batson’s dramatic religious conversion, but one official noted that Batson claimed that his mother, with whom he had been living, “was on his back to straighten out his life.”